Targeted Knockouts of Selected GDSL Esterases and Class III Peroxidases In The Moss Physcomitrella patens Reveal Their Roles in Spore Wall Formation and Germination
Abstract
Early land plants evolved a number of key innovations to invade the land and diversify.
One such innovation was a robust spore wall containing sporopollenin. Sporopollenin is
the main lipidic component of spore and pollen walls and has been proposed to be the
decisive factor for the successful terrestrialization by early plants. Until now, no enzyme
involved in sporopollenin metabolism (polymerization and degradation) has been studied
at the genetic and biochemical levels. I hypothesized that sporopollenin metabolizing
enzymes might be homologs of cutin and lignin metabolizing enzymes belonging to
GDSL esterases and class III peroxidase families, respectively. In this study, two GDSL
esterases (CUSL and CUTL) and three class III peroxidases (PRX38, PRX39 and
PRX47) of a model plant, Physcomitrella patens, were selected as candidate enzymes in
sporopollenin metabolism based on gene expression profiles and phylogenetic analysis.
Targeted knockout experiments were performed, and stable single (cutl, cusl and prx47)
and double knockout (prx38 prx39) plants were generated. Stable knockout lines were
confirmed by gDNA PCR. Single targeted gene replacement in the cutl and cusl lines
was confirmed by Southern blot and RT-PCR. Then the stable knockout lines were
phenotypically analyzed. Cutl and prx47 spores showed delayed germination, whereas
early germination was observed with cusl spores as compared to control spores. In
addition, cusl and prx38 prx39 spores showed augmented osmolysis and cusl spores
were more susceptible to alkaline hydrolysis than control spores. These results suggest
that we may have discovered novel GDSL esterases and class III peroxidases involved in
spore wall formation (CUSL, PRX38 and/or PRX39) and degradation (CUTL and
PRX47) in Physcomitrella. In addition, treatment of developing sporophytes with ROS
scavengers provided support for the involvement of oxidative cross-linking in spore wall
development, including sporopollenin polymerization and/or deposition, as well as a role
for ROS in intine/aperture development. This research contributes to our understanding
of the metabolism of sporopollenin and its evolution in land plants, and may have direct
applications involving this biopolymer in the fields of biomedicine, biotechnology and
green chemistry.